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The national carrier considers the equitization as a “key mission” in 2013 and is moving the process “as fast as possible,” it said in an e-emailed statement yesterday in response to Bloomberg questions. A corporate evaluation report is expected to be completed this month to submit to authorities for approval, the Hanoi-based airline said in the statement.
The plan has been revived as VietJet Aviation Joint Stock Co., the country’s only privately owned carrier, said last week it’s considering an IPO to fund expansion. The government has been trying to conduct an IPO of state-owned Vietnam Airlines since at least 2010 amid intensifying domestic competition. The company expects to hold the share sale in the second half of next year, after a planned offering in 2012 was delayed twice.
Vietnam Airlines said it has been working with advisers including Morgan Stanley and Citigroup Inc. to evaluate its assets for equitization.
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VietJet said last week it is now profitable, with pretax profit in the seven months ended July of about 120 billion dong ($5.7 million), and that it’s considering an initial share sale in 18 months to 42 months. The sale would help fund expansion that would include international markets beyond Bangkok, its only current overseas destination.
The Vietnamese carriers join regional competitors in raising funds for expansion. AirAsia X, the long-haul arm of Asia’s biggest budget carrier, AirAsia X Bhd., raised 988 million ringgit ($308 million) in a June share sale in Kuala Lumpur to set up new hubs and repay bank borrowings, the carrier said. Nok Airlines Co., a budget carrier controlled by Thai Airways International Pcl, raised 4.875 billion baht ($151 million) at its June debut.